Riboswitches are 5'-untranslated regions of mRNA that change their conformation in response to ligand binding, allowing post-transcriptional gene regulation. This ligand-based model of riboswitch function has been expanded with the discovery of a "pH-responsive element" (PRE) riboswitch in Escherichia coli. At neutral pH, the PRE folds into a translationally inactive structure with an occluded ribosome-binding sequence, whereas at alkaline pH, the PRE adopts a translationally active structure. This unique riboswitch does not rely on ligand binding in a traditional sense to modulate its alternative folding outcomes. Rather, pH controls riboswitch folding by two possible modes that are yet to be distinguished; pH either regulates the transcription rate of RNA polymerase (RNAP) or acts on the RNA itself. Previous work suggested that RNAP pausing is prolonged by alkaline pH at two sites, stimulating PRE folding into the active structure. To date, there has been no rigorous exploration into how pH influences RNAP pausing kinetics during PRE synthesis. To provide that understanding and distinguish between pH acting on RNAP versus RNA, we investigated RNAP pausing kinetics at key sites for PRE folding under different pH conditions. We find that pH influences RNAP pausing but not in the manner proposed previously. Rather, alkaline pH either decreases or has no effect on RNAP pause longevity, suggesting that the modulation of RNAP pausing is not the sole mechanism by which pH affects PRE folding. These findings invite the possibility that the RNA itself actively participates in the sensing of pH.